ABSTRACT
Objective: This study analyzed the impact of sex on self-reported health and lifestyle parameters in peripheral artery disease patients at two periods of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Methods: In this longitudinal study, 99 patients with peripheral artery disease (53 men and 46 women) were evaluated during two periods of the COVID-19 pandemic ( i.e ., at onset: May to August 2020, and on follow-up: May to August 2021). Patients were interviewed via telephone, and information regarding lifestyle and health parameters was obtained.
Results: At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, health and habit parameters were similar between women and men, with 63.0% and 45.3% indicating frequent fatigue, 73.9% and 84.9% reporting increased sitting time, and 23.9% and 39.6% practicing physical activity, respectively. At follow-up, difficulties in physical mobility (women: from 26.1% to 73.9%, p<0.001; men: from 39.6% to 71.7%, p=0.001) and the frequency of hospitalization for reasons other than COVID-19 increased similarly in women and men (women: from 4.3% to 21.7%, p=0.013; men: from 9.4% to 24.5%, p=0.038). The other parameters were similar between the periods.
Conclusion: Self-reported physical mobility difficulties and hospitalization frequency increased in women and men with peripheral artery disease.
Keywords: COVID-19; Coronavirus infections; Pandemics; Peripheral arterial disease; Social isolation; Intermittent claudication; Sex characteristics; Life style; Exercise; Mental health
Highlights
▪ Sitting time increased in 73.9% of women and 84.9% of men at the onset of the pandemic.
▪ Physical activity was practiced by 23.9% of women and 39.6% of men at the onset of the pandemic.
▪ The prevalence of both women and men reporting physical mobility difficulties increased at follow-up.
▪ Hospitalization rates for reasons unrelated to COVID-19 have increased in both women and men.
INTRODUCTION
Social isolation has been one of the main measures adopted to mitigate the spread of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The COVID-19 pandemic has negatively impacted lifestyles and health, especially in individuals with long-term conditions, such as those with peripheral artery disease (PAD).( 1 – 4 ) Previous studies have reported reduced physical activity levels, increased sedentary behavior, impaired mental health, and decreased walking capacity in PAD patients during the COVID-19 pandemic.( 1 , 5 – 7 )
Studies have shown that women suffer more consequences related to PAD than men, presenting with worse functional capacity, impaired vascular function, and higher levels of inflammatory markers and morbidity.( 8 – 11 ) Consequently, the prolongation of the COVID-19 pandemic could potentially affect women more than men; however, this remains unclear.
In this study, we investigated lifestyle and health parameters ( i.e ., global and physical) during two periods of the COVID-19 pandemic ( i.e ., at onset, from May to August 2020; and on follow-up, from May to August 2021) in men and women with PAD. We hypothesized that women with PAD would be more negatively affected by these parameters than men during the COVID-19 pandemic.
OBJECTIVE
This study analyzed the impact of sex on self-reported health and lifestyle parameters in patients with peripheral artery disease during two periods of the COVID-19 pandemic.
METHODS
Study design and participants
This prospective study included patients with PAD recruited from a research database of patients who participated in previous studies by our research group.( 12 – 14 )
Patients were included if they met the following criteria: agreed to participate and responded to all survey questions, had a previous diagnosis of PAD; age >45 years. Patients were excluded if they presented with some disability that compromised their answers to the questionnaire during a phone call ( i.e ., cognitive, hearing, or speech).
This study was approved by the Universidade Nove de Julho Ethics Committee before data collection (CAAE: 31529220.8.0000.5511; # 4.647.088). All patients informed their consent prior to participation.
Data collection
Data were collected through phone interviews over two time periods: between May and August 2020 (onset) and between May and August 2021 (follow-up). Personal information was retrieved from our database, including demographic data such as sex, date of birth, time from PAD diagnosis (in years), risk factors, and medications.
The impact of sex on longitudinal changes in the self-reported health and habits of patients were assessed using a questionnaire, as previously described.( 1 , 5 ) The questionnaire consisted of questions divided into the following domains: overall health, physical health, and habits. In the subsequent section, we present the questions used in our analysis.
Overall health: the participants were required to report the presence of all diagnosed diseases from a prepared list, such as hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, and cardiopathy. In addition, participants were asked if they were hospitalized for any reason other than COVID-19.
Physical health: this domain consists of three self-reported items. Patients were asked the following "yes" or "no" questions: 1) Have you been feeling fatigued in the last few weeks? 2) Have you lost weight in the last few weeks? 3) Have you experienced physical mobility difficulties in the last few weeks?
Habits: to explore the possible impact of COVID-19 on eating habits, the following "yes" or "no" questions were asked: 1) Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, have your eating habits worsened? 2) Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, have you spent more time sitting? 3) Have you practiced physical activity regularly, at least once a week, during the COVID-19 pandemic?
Statistical analysis
All statistical analyses were performed using SPSS version 20. The Mann–Whitney U test and χ2 test were used to compare groups (women and men) for continuous and categorical variables at baseline, respectively. The χ2 test was used to compare the differences within each of the groups between the two periods (2020 and 2021) during the COVID-19 pandemic. Data are presented as median and interquartile range for continuous variables and absolute and relative frequencies for categorical variables. Statistical significance was defined as p<0.05.
RESULTS
One hundred and forty-nine PAD patients participated in this study at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. At follow-up, 33 patients could not be contacted, five dropped out for personal reasons, six had a health problem that prevented them from participating in the study, and six died, of which three deaths were due to acute myocardial infarction and one each were due to stroke, kidney disease, and COVID-19. A total of 99 patients (46 women) completed the study. There were no differences between the sexes in terms of age, disease duration, cardiovascular risk factors, or medication use ( Table 1 ).
The self-reported health and habit parameters were also similar between sexes at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic ( Table 2 ).
Self-reported health parameters evaluated in women and men with peripheral artery disease at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic
The self-reported physical mobility difficulty (women: from 26.1% to 73.9%, p<0.001; men: from 39.6% to 71.7%, p=0.001) and frequency of hospitalization for reasons other than COVID-19 (women: from 4.3% to 21.7%, p=0.013; men: from 9.4% to 24.5%, p=0.038) increased in both women and men during the study follow-up compared to the onset ( Figure 1 ).
Self-reported physical mobility difficulty and frequency of hospitalization for reasons other than COVID-19 evaluated in women and men with peripheral arterial disease at study onset and follow-up during the COVID-19 pandemic
In both women and men, self-reported physical health parameters, specifically frequent fatigue (women: from 63.0% to 60.9%, p=0.830; men: from 45.3% to 58.5%, p=0.174) and weight loss (women: from 23.9% to 32.6%, p=0.354; men: from 22.6% to 22.6%, p=1.000), and self-reported lifestyle parameters, specifically worsening eating habits (women: from 19.6% to 6.5%, p=0.063; men: from 9.4% to 7.5%, p=0.727), increased sitting time (women: from 73.9% to 60.9%, p=0.182; men: from 84.9% to 77.4%, p=0.321), and physical activity (women: from 23.9% to 19.6%, p=0.613; men: from 39.6% to 30.2%, p=0.308), were similar between study onset and follow-up.
DISCUSSION
This study demonstrated that self-reported health and lifestyle parameters were similar between women and men with PAD at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. After one year of the COVID-19 pandemic, self-reported health and lifestyle parameters remained similar to those at onset, except for self-reported physical mobility difficulty and frequency of hospitalization for reasons other than COVID-19, which increased in women and men with PAD.( 8 – 11 )
Studies( 8 , 9 , 14 ) performed before the COVID-19 pandemic showed that women with PAD had worse health ( e.g ., physical mobility indicators) and lifestyle ( e.g ., lower physical activity levels and more sedentary behavior) parameters than men with PAD. However, contrary to this evidence, with the exception of a trend towards increased sitting time in men than women with PAD (84.9% versus 73.9%, p=0.174), other self-reported health and lifestyle parameters were similar between men and women in the baseline assessment performed within the first few months of social isolation in Brazil. The findings regarding sitting time may be related to the fact that 30.2% of the men and 23.9% of the women stopped engaging in physical activity during the first few months of the COVID-19 pandemic. In general, studies( 1 , 5 – 7 ) performed on patients with PAD, but without analyzing the sexes separately, during the onset of social isolation demonstrated reduced walking capacity, deteriorating mental health, increased sedentary behavior, and lower physical activity levels compared to the period before the COVID-19 pandemic. A possible explanation is that in women with PAD, many of these parameters were already significantly altered before the COVID-19 pandemic and changed little during the onset of the pandemic. In contrast, those in men may have significantly worsened, reaching values similar to those in women.
Regarding the longitudinal impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, most self-reported health ( i.e ., frequent fatigue and weight reduction) and lifestyle (i.e ., eating habits, physical activity level, and sedentary behavior) parameters did not change after a year in both women and men with PAD. This result contradicts those of other studies( 15 – 18 ) performed in adults without PAD that observed changes in eating habits, weight gain, a reduction in physical activity levels, and an increase in sedentary behavior during the COVID-19 pandemic. In patients with PAD, the possible impact of social isolation at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic on these parameters, which had significantly been altered previously, may have mitigated the changes a year after.
Men and women with PAD reported similar increases in physical mobility difficulties and hospitalizations for reasons other than COVID-19. Some studies before the COVID-19 pandemic observed that PAD severity, comorbid conditions, and social support ( i.e ., marital status) were predictors of physical function in PAD patients( 19 – 21 ) and that non-cardiovascular ( e.g ., respiratory problems, cellulitis, sepsis and other infections, and diabetes mellitus ) and cardiovascular causes ( e.g ., heart failure and chronic ischemic heart disease) were responsible for 68% and 32% of hospitalizations in patients with PAD, respectively.( 22 ) These factors and conditions may have worsened in men and women with PAD during their longitudinal social isolation in Brazil. It is important to highlight that the causes of hospitalization one year after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic are unclear in subjects with or without PAD. Studies( 23 – 26 ) performed on adult subjects without PAD and COVID-19 from different countries during the COVID-19 pandemic ( i.e ., until August 2020), but without comparing the sex, observed that falls, respiratory disease, stroke, cardiac diseases ( i.e ., acute myocardial infarction and heart failure), kidney disease, oncological diseases, and metabolic/endocrine diseases have been the causes of hospitalization. This suggests that the same phenomenon may have also occurred longitudinally ( i.e ., between May and August 2021) in patients with PAD.
This situation is worrying because in addition to the associated comorbidities, specifically peripheral atherosclerosis in patients with PAD, limb ischemia has been significantly more serious during hospitalization, leading to an increased rate of perioperative complications compared to the period before the COVID-19 pandemic.( 27 ) In this context, the results of the present study demonstrate the importance of multidisciplinary care for women and men with PAD during the COVID-19 pandemic. Telemedicine consultations, telerehabilitation programs, and unsupervised home-based exercise programs, among other strategies, are potential options for improving the overall health (physical and mental health, healthy eating habits, and physical activity) of these patients, regardless of sex.
This study has some limitations. First, the use of self-reported assessments is susceptible to information bias. Additionally, subjective assessments ( e.g ., 6-minute walk test) were not performed due to the social isolation adopted to contain the spread of COVID-19. Lastly, these results cannot be extrapolated to other populations with other characteristics.
CONCLUSION
The self-reported health and habit parameters were similar between women and men at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. After one year, women and men with peripheral arterial disease showed similar increases in self-reported physical mobility difficulty and frequency of hospitalization for reasons other than COVID-19.
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Edited by
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Associate Editor:Kenneth Gollob, Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, São Paulo, SP, Brazil. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4184-3867
Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
04 Mar 2024 -
Date of issue
2024
History
-
Received
30 Sept 2022 -
Accepted
12 June 2023